Title of article
American College of Cardiology/ European Society of Cardiology international study of angiographic data compression phase III: Measurement of image quality differences at varying levels of data compression
Author/Authors
Rüdiger Brennecke، نويسنده , , Udo Bürgel، نويسنده , , Rudiger Simon، نويسنده , , Gerd Rippin، نويسنده , , Hans Peter Fritsch، نويسنده , , Tim Becker، نويسنده , , Steven E. Nissen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages
10
From page
1388
To page
1397
Abstract
OBJECTIVES
We sought to investigate up to which level of Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) data compression the perceived image quality and the detection of diagnostic features remain equivalent to the quality and detectability found in uncompressed coronary angiograms.
BACKGROUND
Digital coronary angiograms represent an enormous amount of data and therefore require costly computerized communication and archiving systems. Earlier studies on the viability of medical image compression were not fully conclusive.
METHODS
Twenty-one raters evaluated sets of 91 cine runs. Uncompressed and compressed versions of the images were presented side by side on one monitor, and image quality differences were assessed on a scale featuring six scores. In addition, the raters had to detect pre-defined clinical features. Compression ratios (CR) were 6:1, 10:1 and 16:1. Statistical evaluation was based on descriptive statistics and on the equivalence t-test.
RESULTS
At the lowest CR (CR 6:1), there was already a small (15%) increase in assigning the aesthetic quality score indicating “quality difference is barely discernible—the images are equivalent.” At CR 10:1 and CR 16:1, close to 10% and 55%, respectively, of the compressed images were rated to be “clearly degraded, but still adequate for clinical use” or worse. Concerning diagnostic features, at CR 10:1 and CR 16:1 the error rate was 9.6% and 13.1%, respectively, compared with 9% for the baseline error rate in uncompressed images.
CONCLUSIONS
Compression at CR 6:1 provides equivalence with the original cine runs. If CR 16:1 were used, one would have to tolerate a significant increase in the diagnostic error rate over the baseline error rate. At CR 10:1, intermediate results were obtained.
Keywords
general image quality , JPEG , QA , ACC , QCA , American College of Cardiology , quantitative coronary angiography , Compression ratio , Diagnostic image quality , display controls , Region of interest , DC , ROI , ESC , SD , European Society of Cardiology , Standard deviation , fps , GQ , Joint Photographic Experts Group (computer standard for digital images) , aesthetic image quality , Cr , qd , frames per second
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Serial Year
2000
Journal title
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Record number
595841
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